“I was surprised and delighted when I heard about receiving this award,” Cooper said. “I have spent my career working to try to improve large enrollment courses that many students have to take as part of their curriculum.”

A strong proponent of evidence-based curriculum reform and assessment for large enrollment chemistry classes, Cooper changed the pedagogical landscape of STEM education across MSU’s campus. Her course, Chemistry, Life, the Universe and Everything, or CLUE, and her novel cooperative chemistry laboratory gave thousands of undergraduate students a deeper and more robust understanding of chemistry and the ability to apply their learning skills to all areas of STEM education.

“Research has shown these large enrollment courses to be crucial to continued student success,” Cooper said, “but we also know that many students are turned off or delayed in their academic progress by courses that are unwelcoming and apparently irrelevant.”

“Melanie has been a key figure in the transformation efforts in the general chemistry program at MSU,” said Amy Pollock, academic specialist, director of general chemistry and Cooper’s nominator. “Although she has not personally taught every student who has taken the transformed general chemistry courses, she has had an indirect and lasting impact on the futures of all of these students. She is most deserving of this award, and I am very happy that her efforts are being recognized.”

Cooper, who was passionately nominated by both colleagues and students for her outstanding mentorship and innovative course design, continues to bring graduate students, postdocs, academic specialists and faculty involved in undergraduate STEM education together to share their knowledge and learn from each other’s experiences. She is currently lead investigator of a five-year, $1.3 million grant from the National Science Foundation to implement an innovative teaching and learning model known as three-dimensional, or 3D, learning and to examine the impact on students in terms of learning and retention in STEM as well as graduation rates.

“We have developed courses that support students as they learn to use their knowledge, and have seen some real improvements in student success,” said Cooper. “Teaching these courses brings me a great deal of personal satisfaction – I really enjoy teaching students, and to receive this award is icing on the cake!”

Cooper received her bachelor’s of science, master’s of science and doctorate in chemistry from the University of Manchester, England. Before joining MSU in 2012, she conducted postdoctoral work in organic chemistry at Clemson University and was awarded an honorary doctorate of science by the University of South Florida in 2017.

MSU will host 72 high school teams in Jenison Field House on Sunday, Feb. 24, for the 2019 Michigan VEX Robotics State Championships. Around 500 of Michigan's top STEM high school students will participate.